The Biblical Model for Funding Missionary Work

A sum­ma­ry of the bib­li­cal prece­dents for mis­sion­ar­ies solic­it­ing funds so that they can devote them­selves to full-time min­istry.

How should mis­sion­ar­ies be paid? Bib­li­cal­ly, there can be only one answer to this ques­tion. As Paul says, the Lord has com­mand­ed that those who pro­claim the gospel should get their liv­ing by the gospel (1 Cor 9.14). The teach­ing is very explic­it. There are many exam­ples of this prin­ci­ple being prac­ticed in the Scrip­tures. Here are just a few:

  • First and most sig­nif­i­cant­ly, Jesus’ min­istry was fund­ed by some of those who heard Him (Luke 8.1–3), and He taught the dis­ci­ples to rely on oth­ers while min­is­ter­ing (Matthew 10.5–15).
  • Sec­ond, Paul request­ed that the Roman church finan­cial­ly sup­port Phoebe, one of the min­is­ters at Cenchrae. (Romans 16.1–2)
  • Third, Paul him­self received sup­port and was grate­ful for the sup­port he received: Philip­pi­ans 4.10–20 (peo­ple fre­quent­ly assume that Paul always sup­port­ed him­self by mak­ing tents. Actu­al­ly, that was the sec­ond-best option for him. See Acts 18.1–5, where Paul began by mak­ing tents and quit as soon as it was finan­cial­ly fea­si­ble to do so. See 1 Corinthi­ans 9.1–18, where Paul’s whole point is that the Corinthi­ans owed him sup­port: he con­cludes the let­ter by telling them that he hopes to stop by and that he hopes they will pro­vide for him to fin­ish his jour­ney in 1 Cor 16.5–6. Also see Romans 15.20–24, where Paul asks a church he has nev­er vis­it­ed before to fund him on his jour­ney to Spain.) In addi­tion, Paul explic­it­ly teach­es in Gala­tians 6.6 that Chris­tians are oblig­at­ed to pro­vide for the needs of min­is­ters.
  • Fourth, the apos­tle John encour­aged his friend to sup­port a band of mis­sion­ar­ies in 3 John 5–8.
  • Fifth, the whole Levit­i­cal sys­tem in the Old Tes­ta­ment (the Levites were min­is­ters) is pred­i­cat­ed on the finan­cial sup­port of min­is­ters by the rest of God’s peo­ple (Num­bers 18.21–24 is a rep­re­sen­ta­tive exam­ple). See Nehemi­ah 13.4–11 for how out­raged Nehemi­ah was that the Levites had to go earn wages in anoth­er fash­ion.

In sum­ma­ry, there is an extreme­ly strong Bib­li­cal case for mis­sion­ar­ies rais­ing finan­cial sup­port from the Body of Christ.

Which bring me to my point: we’re mis­sion­ar­ies and we need your part­ner­ship! If you’d like to sup­port our min­istry finan­cial­ly, here’s how.

Inci­den­tal­ly, the word that we pre­fer to use when dis­cussing finan­cial sup­port­ers is part­ner. That word was cho­sen very care­ful­ly. If you’re curi­ous, read about how mis­sions is real­ly a part­ner­ship

If you still have unan­swered ques­tions about sup­port­ing mis­sion­ar­ies, you might be inter­est­ed in our answers to com­mon ques­tions about sup­port­ing mis­sion­ar­ies.

Questions About Support-Raising

Answers to com­mon ques­tions about sup­port-rais­ing.

Assem­blies of God mis­sion­ar­ies are not allowed to begin their mis­sion until they have assem­bled a team of church­es and indi­vid­u­als will­ing to fund their min­istry. This often con­fus­es peo­ple, so I thought I’d answer what I per­ceive to be the com­mon ques­tions.

Can You Just Give Me a Quick Expla­na­tion?

There is a con­sis­tent prin­ci­ple taught in the Scrip­tures: min­is­ters should be paid by the peo­ple of God. In this regard, there are two broad cat­e­gories of min­is­ters: pas­tors, who are paid by the local con­gre­ga­tions they serve, and mis­sion­ar­ies, who are paid by oth­ers than the ones they are min­is­ter­ing to.

Chi Alpha cam­pus work­ers are mis­sion­ar­ies. The rea­son for this is very sim­ple: col­lege stu­dents don’t have any mon­ey! In addi­tion, the col­lege scene in Amer­i­can is as pagan as any place on earth, so there are few who would be will­ing to pay Chris­t­ian work­ers even if they did have the resources to do so.

For this rea­son, then, Chi Alpha cam­pus work­ers are required to build a sup­port team to aid them in their min­istry. Part of that sup­port is prayer, part of it is emo­tion­al sup­port, and part of it is finan­cial sup­port.

Is this Bib­li­cal?

Yes! For more detail, read our essay on The Bib­li­cal Basis for Sup­port-Rais­ing.

Why does­n’t the church pay you?

The church is pay­ing us. The church is not a build­ing; the church is peo­ple!

Ha, ha. So why does­n’t your denom­i­na­tion pay you a salary?

  • If the denom­i­na­tion salaries mis­sion­ar­ies, the mon­ey has to come from somewhere–and that some­where is the church­es. Effec­tive­ly, it becomes a tax on church­es.
  • His­tor­i­cal­ly, denom­i­na­tions that tax church­es this way have very few missionaries–nobody likes to pay tax­es, not even church­es. Rais­ing sup­port by con­tact­ing friends and fam­i­ly is a far more effec­tive strat­e­gy. Plus, it’s the Bib­li­cal method!
  • It’s a scal­able sys­tem. Every new mis­sion­ary is required to go and gen­er­ate the funds nec­es­sary for their own min­istry. No mat­ter how many mis­sion­ar­ies we have, we can always have more because there’s no fixed allot­ment that all the mis­sion­ar­ies have to com­pete for scraps of.
  • Rais­ing sup­port requires that a min­ster build a net­work of rela­tion­ships which keep him account­able and moti­vate him to work dili­gent­ly. If you know that your best friend is pay­ing part of your salary, you’re much less inclined to goof off.
  • Mis­sion­ar­ies beget mis­sion­ar­ies! Most mis­sion­ar­ies become mis­sion­ar­ies through con­tact with anoth­er mis­sion­ary. Sup­port-rais­ing forces mis­sion­ar­ies to devel­op rela­tion­ships that ulti­mate­ly result in the pro­duc­tion of new mis­sion­ar­ies.

Why do you have to raise your full bud­get first?

Because the Assem­blies of God wants long-term suc­cess­es, not one-shot won­ders. If mis­sion­ar­ies reach their fields before they raise their full sup­port, they are much more like­ly to fail their task. They become con­sumed with their work, and they even­tu­al­ly reach a point where they must either quit, get a part-time job, or live in unhealthy con­di­tions. None of these things is con­ducive to long-term min­istry. By forc­ing mis­sion­ar­ies to raise their bud­get in full, the A/G con­tributes great­ly to their longevi­ty in min­istry. By con­tribut­ing to longevi­ty they con­tribute to effec­tive­ness.

Longevi­ty aside, insuf­fi­cient fund­ing has imme­di­ate impli­ca­tions. With­out a full bud­get our abil­i­ty to min­is­ter is lit­er­al­ly com­pro­mised. Our mis­sion­ary bud­get is not just our salary! It’s actu­al­ly the full orga­ni­za­tion­al bud­get for our min­istry. Out of that bud­get, a cer­tain amount goes to our salary and the rest goes toward work expens­es: with­out those funds min­istry oppor­tu­ni­ties have to be passed up. Like every­thing else, min­istry requires mon­ey.

Who over­sees the finances?

We are account­able to Assem­blies of God US Mis­sions. All funds are rout­ed through them in order to pro­vide finan­cial over­sight for the mis­sion­ar­ies.

How do I begin sup­port­ing your min­istry?

Just fol­low these instruc­tions.

What Is Chi Alpha?

Many peo­ple seem puz­zled by what it is that we do. This is a very brief intro­duc­tion to the won­der­ful world of cam­pus min­istry.

Paula and I work with Chi Alpha Cam­pus Min­istries at Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty (check out our group web­site). Chi Alpha is a mis­sions pro­gram of the Assem­blies of God tar­get­ing col­leges and uni­ver­si­ties across Amer­i­ca.

You might be won­der­ing why the Assem­blies of God sends mis­sion­ar­ies to col­lege campuses–read our expla­na­tion of cam­pus­es as mis­sion fields.

So what do you do?
We strive to build an on-cam­pus com­mu­ni­ty of stu­dents who are earnest­ly fol­low­ing Jesus. We do that by lead­ing mid­week wor­ship ser­vices in the mid­dle of cam­pus, by spon­sor­ing Bible stud­ies in the dorms, and by con­duct­ing var­i­ous out­reach­es.

How To Partner With Us

How to make con­tri­bu­tions to our min­istry, whether you want to give online or send it in the mail.

DISCLAIMER: this infor­ma­tion is on our web­site because some peo­ple actu­al­ly come here look­ing for it. Oth­er peo­ple get hor­ri­bly offend­ed at the men­tion of mon­ey and dona­tions online. If you’re not of the for­mer, chill. Just fil­ter out this mes­sage and look at some of the more enter­tain­ing stuff on this site.

When they left to tell oth­ers about the Lord, they decid­ed not to accept help from any­one who was­n’t a fol­low­er. We must sup­port peo­ple like them, so that we can take part in what they are doing to spread the truth. 3 John 7–8, CEV

We’d love to have you join our part­ner­ship team! If you any ques­tions about why we raise funds this way, check out our answers to com­mon ques­tions about sup­port-rais­ing and our essay on the Bib­li­cal basis for finan­cial­ly sup­port­ing mis­sion­ar­ies.

1) jun­gle cubs down­load Decide on the amount you would like to give ($50, $75 or $100 a month is typ­i­cal) and whether you plan to give month­ly, year­ly, or at some oth­er
rate. If you’re inter­est­ed in mak­ing a spe­cial gift, you can do that as well!

2) Print and fill out this form (small PDF, around 100k).

3) Give online or make a check out to the Gen­er­al Coun­cil of the Assem­blies of God, and write Account #2650299 in the memo field of your check. If you’d like, you can eas­i­ly set up your pledge as a month­ly cred­it card trans­ac­tion (the form is a lit­tle con­fus­ing: leave any fields you don’t under­stand blank except ledger–write 2650299 in that col­umn).

4) Mail your check to

Chi Alpha
Account #2650299
1445 N Boonville Ave
Spring­field, MO 65802
 

That account num­ber is very impor­tant! With­out it, it will be much hard­er
for them to process your infor­ma­tion. Thank you very much, and please
don’t for­get to pray for us!

Nichole Quigley, from SMSU

“We
are in a real strug­gle for eter­nal souls, and you are liv­ing on the most
fer­tile mis­sion field in the world; the col­lege cam­pus.” I vivid­ly remem­ber
these words from Glen’s ser­mon. They often echo in my heart as the home­work
piles and the semes­ter drones on. This is just one of the many per­spec­tives
I have learned from Glen and Paula.

I came to SMS as a sopho­more, trans­fer­ring from a school
out of state with­out know­ing a sin­gle per­son. In des­per­a­tion I tried to
plug into a min­istry and found myself drawn to Chi Alpha because the
group was pas­sion­ate, per­son­al, and gen­uine
. Lat­er I found the group
was a reflec­tion of the lead­er­ship.

Glen and Paula prac­tice what they preach. Their faith­ful­ness
to Jesus Christ and this col­lege min­istry has made Chi Alpha suc­cess­ful
in my life, and in the lives of many oth­er stu­dents as well. Their pas­sion
is con­ta­gious. Maybe even more impor­tant­ly, Glen and Paula believe in
me, a uni­ver­si­ty stu­dent. They saw poten­tial in me that I could not see
in myself and dili­gent­ly cul­ti­vat­ed it. They are so approach­able and will­ing
to sac­ri­fice time to pour their lives into stu­dents like me. Their time,
prayers, and encour­age­ment have changed the course of my col­lege career
and min­istry.

How College Affects Students

Why cam­pus min­istry is so nec­es­sary.

Col­lege can be a dan­ger­ous place for a Chris­tian’s faith!

To begin with, 2 out of every 3 teenagers involved with a youth group already plan to leave the church once they’re on their own (i.e., in col­lege). One out of every 8 bails on the church before they even set foot on the col­lege cam­pus (Leonard Sweet, SoulT­suna­mi page 47).

Even leav­ing that dis­turb­ing fact aside, col­lege isn’t too kind to the faith of stu­dents.

Quotes from Pas­carel­la and Teren­zi­ni: How Col­lege Affects
Stu­dents: Find­ings and Insights From Twen­ty Years of Research

“the lit­er­a­ture pub­lished since 1967 fair­ly con­sis­tent­ly reports sig­nif­i­cant declines in reli­gious atti­tudes, val­ues, and behav­iors dur­ing the col­lege years.” p 280–281

“The like­li­hood of chang­ing to no reli­gious
pref­er­ence was also high­est at so-called elite insti­tu­tions.” p 303

“In prob­a­bly the strongest stud­ies on this point, Astin (1972b, 1977a) found (net of oth­er per­son­al and back­ground fac­tors) sig­nif­i­cant­ly greater than expect­ed decreas­es in con­ven­tion­al reli­gious affil­i­a­tion and in reli­gious­ness (that is, pray­ing and read­ing the Bible) among stu­dents attend­ing selec­tive or pres­ti­gious schools.”

But there is hope: in the same vol­ume, the authors state:
“Only a hand­ful of stud­ies exam­ine
the long-term effects of col­lege on reli­gious atti­tudes and val­ues,
but with one excep­tion, they indi­cate that changes in this area occur
dur­ing but appar­ent­ly not after the col­lege years.” p 323

In oth­er words, col­lege is our last chance to reach a gen­er­a­tion! That’s why there must be cam­pus min­istry at sec­u­lar col­leges and uni­ver­si­ties!

Nicholette Lockwood, from SMSU

Wow!
How can I begin to describe how Chi Alpha has lit­er­al­ly changed my world,
turned it upside down, made me a new per­son! When I came to col­lege my
heart was aching and ready to encounter Jesus Christ, although I didn’t
know it. When I first came to Thurs­day night fel­low­ship, I was uncom­fort­able
and a bit tak­en aback by the atmos­phere. But soon God dis­played His incred­i­bly
amaz­ing love through all of the peo­ple involved at Chi Alpha. I joined
a small group, and in Novem­ber of my fresh­man year, after TNF one night,
I gave my life to Christ. I began an amaz­ing jour­ney into life
with Him. Through Chi Alpha here at SMS I have met two of the most gra­cious,
lov­ing, and influ­en­tial peo­ple in my life, Glen and Paula Davis. Start­ing
my sopho­more year I was just fine, but dur­ing the Christ­mas break I expe­ri­enced
an enor­mous­ly con­fus­ing, depress­ing, and life-chang­ing stage in my Chris­t­ian
walk. I began ques­tion­ing almost every­thing I could make up a ques­tion
for. Dur­ing this time Glen began doing his “Bowl­ing Alley The­olo­gian”
thing, and I start­ed com­ing to talk to him about my ques­tions. I found
that he has abound­ing wis­dom from God, and uses that wis­dom to share God’s
love in a prac­ti­cal way. I dis­cov­ered that he was able to explain things
in ways that I could under­stand, ways that no one else could. And he cared
deeply about me and my life. Because of Glen’s help, I grad­u­al­ly made
my way back to a healthy life of love for Jesus. Last semes­ter I also
began to talk to Glen’s wife, Paula, about oth­er issues I could not talk
to Glen about because he sug­gest­ed she could help me. I am now in my junior
year, and Paula and I have become very close friends too. She has shown
me so much love and appre­ci­a­tion that when­ev­er I need or desire com­fort
and care, I can just seek this awe­some cou­ple out and they let me know
how much Jesus loves me. They dri­ve me to church every Sun­day, take me
out to lunch to talk with me about my life on a reg­u­lar basis, and inspire
me to love peo­ple more. I can­not thank God enough for plant­i­ng Chi Alpha
here at SMS and for plac­ing Glen and Paula here at this time to min­is­ter
to me and the oth­er needy stu­dents on cam­pus.

P.S. Nic­ho­lette has her own blog!

Our Big Prayer Needs

We are busy refin­ing our plan for our first few quar­ters at Stan­ford.
Please pray that God would show us His strat­e­gy for the cam­pus!

We are con­fi­dent that God is prepar­ing the cam­pus for us even while
He pre­pares us for the cam­pus. Please pray for our future small
group lead­ers, wor­ship lead­ers, and the oth­er stu­dents God is work­ing
in.

We need to fin­ish rais­ing our bud­get to be able to start on cam­pus in the Fall Quar­ter. Pray that God would con­nect us with the part­ners He’s already raised up!

Levi Augur, From SMSU

This first time I heard Glen speak was in the fall of 2000. Glen’s mes­sage was about attain­ing a desire for wis­dom. His mes­sage began with a mem­o­rable sto­ry about he and a room­mate acci­den­tal­ly lit his car­pet on fire. This usu­al­ly hap­pens when flam­ma­ble liq­uids and aerosols are sprayed on the car­pets. This thought was for­eign to Glen’s room­mate before he struck the match.

As Glen told his sto­ry, every post-teenage boy in the room, that had ever tak­en a match to aerosol can, played WWF in the back­yard, or licked a pole in win­ter, sat with and atti­tude of under­stand­ing and agree­ment. This was real­ly a fun­ny sto­ry, but the impor­tance was stressed lat­er. Proverb 1:7, “The fear of the Lord is the begin­ning of knowl­edge, but fools despise wis­dom and instruc­tion.” Glen has under­stood the val­ue of wis­dom and has been encour­aged to desire Gods wise instruc­tion. This was evi­dent to me, that Thurs­day night a year and half ago, when I heard his mes­sage.

I spent the next month out­lin­ing Solomon’s teach­ings and instruc­tions laid out for his sons. I can say, because of my rela­tion to Glen through his mes­sage, I was encour­aged to learn the Fear of God. Since then I have learned about obe­di­ence, a right behav­ior, patience, humil­i­ty, dili­gence, and above all love.

Melissa Glazebrook, from SMSU

The
sum­mer before I start­ed col­lege, I was real­ly strug­gling spir­i­tu­al­ly.
A friend told me that I should check out Chi Alpha, so a lit­tle grudg­ing­ly
I went to the first meet­ing. I felt the pres­ence of God in that meet­ing
like I had nev­er before.
I decid­ed to get involved in a small group
Bible study and began to let God change things in me. I was tak­en through
sev­er­al dif­fer­ent stages of dis­ci­ple­ship and learned what it meant to
tru­ly wor­ship. God brought me from a luke­warm­ness and cre­at­ed a great
pas­sion in me for see­ing His mes­sage car­ried across our cam­pus and into
the world. Last year I was able to serve as a small group leader and Paula
was my small group coach. She taught me a lot about lead­ing people–being
real with them, meet­ing them where they are at, and grow­ing with them.
I am thank­ful that God put Chi Alpha and all the peo­ple that are a part
of our min­istry in my life. The lessons I have learned in the past three
years have been invalu­able.